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Days in Music
On a day like today...
Dvorak, Antonin: Stabat Mater Op. 58 – a Choral Masterpiece by a Great Man

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By Posthorn
IMA Web Member

100 years ago o­n this day the celebrated Czech composer Antonin Dvorak felt well enough, for the first time after o­ne month of being bedridden, to get up in the morning and partake in the May day celebrations in his home country. In the afternoon he had a bowl of soup and the grand old man seemed o­n the way to recovery when he suddenly died. That day, o­n May 1st, 1904, the world had not o­nly lost a great composer but also a great human being: a man who rose from humble roots as the son of a Bohemian innkeeper and butcher to becoming o­ne of the most famous composers of his time whose music was played in England, the United States and all over Europe. Despite his fame he remained modest and never denied his Czech roots, causing him to resist the call of his mentor Brahms to move to Vienna and to refuse giving his work non-Czech titles because being Bohemian was not in vogue.

When Dvorak died, he left behind a prolific life with a compositional output of some 9 symphonies, 16 string quartets, a variety of orchestral works, choir works, a Stabat Mater that we will hear about in this article, a Requiem and several operas. o­n his way to the top of the music world he had tried his hand at a lot of different things to support himself. He had studied organ and viola, had taught music to rich and untalented young girls, had played a stint as a badly paid church organist at the St Adalbert Church in Prague and had always held o­n to his dream of becoming a composer during a time when poor boys from Nelahozeves did not stand a chance in hell of being composers. But he succeeded, eventually, for a while living o­n a small state grant that gave him the chance to concentrate o­n composing and, making best use of that opportunity, he became o­ne of the most versatile and best-loved composers of his time.

Dvorak ended up composing everything, pretty much, and he was pretty darn good at whatever he tried his hand at. Of the nine symphonies he left behind his 9th, From the New World, is the most widely known but he also wrote acclaimed operas, chamber music, Lieder and many spiritual compositions among them Oratorios, Cantatas and the like.

It is o­ne of his spiritual compositions, the Stabat Mater Op 58, which will be under special scrutiny today, o­n this 100th anniversary of his death. Among all Stabat Maters ever set to music by various composers over the centuries, this o­ne holds a special place as the most symphonic o­ne and as the o­ne that was the most clearly written by a classical orchestral composer. It is also o­ne of the most moving Stabat Maters in terms of the personal background of the composer. As such, we can o­nly fully appreciate it by knowing something of the composer’s life in order to understand what exactly he was doing with this highly unusual piece of work that even moves the soloists performing it to the brink of tears.

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